Let be an abelian countable discrete group. A measure-preserving -system (or -system for short) is a probability space , equipped with a measure-preserving action of the group , thus

for all and , and

for all , with equal to the identity map. Classically, ergodic theory has focused on the cyclic case (in which the are iterates of a single map , with elements of being interpreted as a time parameter), but one can certainly consider actions of other groups also (including continuous or non-abelian groups).

A -system is said to be strongly -mixing, or strongly mixing for short, if one has

for all , where the convergence is with respect to the one-point compactification of (thus, for every , there exists a compact (hence finite) subset of such that for all ).

Similarly, we say that a -system is strongly -mixing if one has

for all , thus for every , there exists a finite subset of such that

whenever all lie outside .

It is obvious that a strongly -mixing system is necessarily strong -mixing. In the case of -systems, it has been an open problem for some time, due to Rohlin, whether the converse is true:

This is a surprisingly difficult problem. In the positive direction, a routine application of the Cauchy-Schwarz inequality (via van der Corput’s inequality) shows that every strongly mixing system is weakly -mixing, which roughly speaking means that converges to for most. Indeed, every weakly mixing system is in fact weakly mixing of all orders; see for instance this blog post of Carlos Matheus, or these lecture notes of myself. So the problem is to exclude the possibility of correlation between , , and for a small but non-trivial number of pairs .

It is also known that the answer to Rohlin’s problem is affirmative for rank one transformations (a result of Kalikow) and for shifts with purely singular continuous spectrum (a result of Host; note that strongly mixing systems cannot have any non-trivial point spectrum). Indeed, any counterexample to the problem, if it exists, is likely to be highly pathological.

In the other direction, Rohlin’s problem is known to have a negative answer for -systems, by a well-known counterexample of Ledrappier which can be described as follows. One can view a -system as being essentially equivalent to a stationary process of random variables in some range space indexed by , with being with the obvious shift map

In Ledrappier’s example, the take values in the finite field of two elements, and are selected at uniformly random subject to the “Pascal’s triangle” linear constraints

for all powers of two . This is enough to destroy strong -mixing, because it shows a strong correlation between , , and for arbitrarily large and randomly chosen . On the other hand, one can still show that and are asymptotically uncorrelated for large , giving strong -mixing. Unfortunately, there are significant obstructions to converting Ledrappier’s example from a -system to a -system, as pointed out by de la Rue.

In this post, I would like to record a “finite field” variant of Ledrappier’s construction, in which is replaced by the function field ring , which is a “dyadic” (or more precisely, “triadic”) model for the integers (cf. this earlier blog post of mine). In other words:

Theorem 2 There exists a -system that is strongly -mixing but not strongly -mixing.

The idea is much the same as that of Ledrappier; one builds a stationary -process in which are chosen uniformly at random subject to the constraints

for all and all . Again, this system is manifestly not strongly -mixing, but can be shown to be strongly -mixing; I give details below the fold.

As I discussed in this previous post, in many cases the dyadic model serves as a good guide for the non-dyadic model. However, in this case there is a curious rigidity phenomenon that seems to prevent Ledrappier-type examples from being transferable to the one-dimensional non-dyadic setting; once one restores the Archimedean nature of the underlying group, the constraints (1) not only reinforce each other strongly, but also force so much linearity on the system that one loses the strong mixing property.

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